


^. '■>. 









^^ A* ^V 






















.%'>•. ^a •■^' 

















































'>0^ 



< o 



^^''\ 
■^ 



V-^^ 





■bo 
of-l: 











•1 o 
































|{^,^ -V -^ 



A 



■I',' lie* 'J^ " V, 



o V 



'^-',' . 



>* 



-J- .A^ 



\- 












;^.r^..w->. 






^*'' ' .-■' 



% 
.""- -^-. 



«P:^ ^^\ 



' .^" 



•^, 



'oV" 



,\ 






■-Z' -t 







'^ :^ym^ ,^^- ^u^-m^.^' 






rf 



C' • O , O ' -({.^ 

^ ^ ' ,.^> ■■'■ 









o V 

.0 .^ 



<% 'o . . • ,0^ 






Hq 



'b V 






.-iq 



v^ 



.„, ~- *-^ '^ - '^•' 






• • * * ' 
















"-"o' .V q^ * 



-^t-o^ 



''V, 






7 4 A. 



^bv 



^"•^<^. 



■f;-!^* 



i^^-n^ 






■^^c 

-' .^^' 









^0 



^°-^<^, 






V .1-°' q, j,o^ »iV^'* 

. /r:^k:^ /^i^jX, /s^<y- /^>^%\ .'' 








^ur f^iPrSf ^okimbian 




FOUR 
HUNDRED 
YEARS 
AGO 



e» es 



fl Colurribiari Poern for tl-je Childreri w'h(0 "Were unable 
: : : to attend tl^e World's Fair. : : : 



BY 



Mi=lRY W. 'BRENDER. 
I* 

[ILLUSTRATED] 



PRICE rirTY CENTS, 






otsego, mich. 

Published by the Author: 

1.S93 






COPYRIGHTED, 1893 
BY 

Mary W. Brender 

ALL HHillT.S ItESERVKl) 



PREFACE. 

The object of the writer in preparing the contents of 
this booklet, was a sketch of the most interesting incidents 
of the discovery of America, t^oth Columbian and Ante- 
Columbian, convenient for the childish mind to retain. 
The writer does not claim for this work even ordinary 
literary perfection, but an easy mental preparation for the 
increasing archeolical interest in our country. It was 
intended to be ready for sale at the Columbian Exposi- 
tion, but was unavoidably delayed. Its late appearance 
is owing to the influence of certain friends of the writer 
who insist that it is sufficiently instructive to guarantee a 
reasonable intirest from friends of children in search of 
useful reading; hence it is submitted for publication. 
Very sincerely, 

THE A UTHORESS. 



DEDlCATllJN : 

TO MV DEAR LITTLE NIECE AND NEPHEW. THIS LITTLE 
BOOK 1 DEDICATE, WITH BEST WISHES. 

THE AUTHOR. 




>T^' 



INTRoDUCTORq 



Mv Dear Y(jung Readkks: 

I have a little niece and nt-phew who wished very 
much to attend the great World's P'au" at Chicaj^o, 
but were told bv their parents that, although kind 
people had taken a great deal of pains to have thnigs 
nicelv arranged for those children who should come, 
it would not be a wise plan to take children where there 
would be such great crowds of jieople; so, as they 
could not see the White Citv built for the World's Colum- 
bian Exposition, to please them 1 promised to write a 
little story' about the great man in whose honor the great 
Fair was held. Soon I was reminded ot the many, many 
children in our countr_\" who would ne\'er see an\' of the 
beautiful sights of the great Fair at Jackson Park, and 
said. "I will write my stoi v for all ot the little children 
who must stav at home." It you like this little story, 
look at the frontispiece, and remember that if it had not 
[jeen for these two little ones, I would never have thought 
of writing it. My object in writing this is: 

7 



First, to interest you in the early history of our 
country, and other people who have been a blessing to 
the world. Tryin<4 to understand intelligent people's 
minds enlightens our own minds, and leads to nobler life. 
Just now everybody is more especially interested in the 
discovery of America. 

We wonder if Christopher Columlnis ever had an 
idea that some day in a great country like ours, children 
would everywhere be talkint; and reading and studying so 
much about him.-' It seems he was very fond of his own 
little children, ot whom two only, grew up to be men. 
We think too, he must have been kind to his little sister 
and brothers, of whom he was the eldest; for we are told 
b\' some that as soon as he was able, he earned money to 
helj) his father educate his younger l)rothers. This was 
m)od of him, much better than if he had been seliish, 
thinking only of himself, spending his time idly. His 
father was a poc^ir man l)ut he managed to send his child- 
ren to school. .As there were no public schools then, it was 
;i much harder task for parents, than now-a-days. We 
think little Christopher must have improved his time well 
at school, and studied and read a i^reat deal out of school 
too. We don't believe he spent much time on silly, use- 
less reading, or when he grew up he would never have 
had some of tire wisest scholars among his friends and ac- 
(piaintances. 

It seems he felt always that God meant for him to 
do something wise and usetul tor the world. He lived in 
a time when people had not Ntudied out so many things 
about science as they now know. You now laugh to think 
people ever believed the world flat. But it was so. 
Onlv a very few of the wisest people believed that it might 

,s 



possibly be round. Columbus truly believed that it was 
round and that he could prove it so. He was not afraid 
of the unknown sea as most seamen were. It is said 
some seamen driven by storms had accidently drifted on- 
to unknown land in the west. But it is not said that 
many of them ever ventured back again. And their 
stories abnut land were always forgotten again. It need- 
ed a man who could unite the ideas of learned people with 
courage and patience. 

Columbus did not expect by sailing west to find a 
new country, but an old one; and by so doing prove the 
world was round. When he found America he supposed 
he had found Asia, and proved the world a sphere. He 
did not quite prove the world was round but his courage 
inspired other seamen to keep on trying and sailing until 
about thirty years later a ship of F'erdinand Magellan did 
sail around the world for the first time in a three years 
voyage, 15 19-1522. 

Some writers tell us that Columbus was not always 
a good man; but we cannot believe that he was not, for 
he was a good boy and we have always believed that good 
boys and girls would become good men and women. We 
are told that he died like a christian, at peace with God; 
and with a bad conscience we don't think this could have 
been. If he did do wrong it is very sad that such a great 
life should be blotted by sins that will not hide themselves 
anymore than his great deeds. Learn from this dear 
young friends to keep your lives pure and free from all 
sin. 

Secondly, I wish to help you become, in time, ac- 
quainted with the ideas some people have of the very, 
very early history of our country. I do not expect you to 

9 



understand the whole of this Httle story at once. I wish 
you to ask those who do understand, a ^i'Q3.t many ques- 
tions and be guided into useful reading. 

Thirdly, 1 hope it will set you early to thinking about 
living to some wise and useful purpose, as God may 
direct. Whether it be in a great or humble sjihere, let it 
be that which you feel pleases God, and by so doing be- 
come a blessing. It requires a great deal of diligence 
and patience united with courage and pluck just such as 
Columbus had, to live to a noble purpose. Columbus 
reminds us of Abraham when the Lord told him to go out 
and find a country, that he would show him. He did not 
know where he was going, or what was before him but he 
tried to live to the high purpose that God wished him to, 
when he said to him "thou shalt be a blessing." Jose- 
phus tells us that Abraham was a man of enlightened 
ideas and taught the world many wise ami good things. 
Columbus to became a blessing when he Hved to prove a 
wise idea, and gave science and learning such a strong 
push ahead that the world never can go l.)ack to. at least 
one old ignorant notion. And too he found a new coun- 
try, for people to settle and build up with hajipy homes 
and all privileges of a free Christian country. Let us all 
try to take good care of our country, continualh' building 
up its government on principles of righteousness and jus- 
tice. And in whatever station let the world be the lietter 
for our lives. That this little booklet may inspire nou to 
live to an eternal purpose and become a blessing to hu- 
manity is the wish of 

Sincerely yours, 

MARY IV. B RENDER. 



10 



Qup P>\pA Qolumhlan, 



'^ 



f)R 



PoLii^ I^LiridpesI ,J/eap^ p,<Jo. 



©yi (Sfl ©^j) 



CHAPTER I. 



How learned people's minds have changed, 'tis found, 

Since Columbus first said the world was round. 

Now they jeer a child who onl}' doubts that. 

Then wise men jeered him, and declared it must be flat, 

Nor yet so big by half. 
Close quarters we think it would have been 

F"or youngsters of our day, 

If thev had had their say. 
Or if brave Isabella had been as hard to win 

Four hundred years ago. 



13 



The Old World was then so full of people 
At every step they'd almost touch and jostle; 
Now imagine our splendid mountain )ieaks 
And \alle\s, rushing rivers and pretty creeks, 

Sunny plains and smiling lakes. 
And our own dear shade tree with shout and stir, 
I'^-oni stately southern palm to northern hr. 






-.- Jf'- •■■■■I' ¥".■;»'*'-* 










^^ii^-^:,: 



Hill, orchard, park and lawn 
Where the children skip like lawn. 
All hidden in the bosom of the sea as they were 
Four hundred years ago. 



14 



What would we little AnuTicans witli Ijusy hands 

And roaminij; feet hnd to do in other lands. ^ 

Would there be room for us where like hav-shocks the\' pile 

The roses of Asia or lilies of the Nile; 

The vule-logs fetch witli holU- and mistletoe; 

Or cull dainty for-get-mi' not to strow 

In the blue rolling Danube? 
A coral island then was hardly known — 

So like a fairy land — 

Bright shells on sunny strand, — 
Built as 'twere on a solid procious stone. 

P'our hundred years ago. 

Thmk how the mitres, crowns and turbans, 
Of mikados, rajahs popes and sultans, 

Would tip and lall about. 
And czars, and shahs, and kings, and kaisers storm, 

If every boy and girl 

Began to skip and whirl. 
For then they could not make them all contorm; 
And sometimes they stirred the world to such commotion 
It never returned to its old-fashioned notion: 
Like Luther's preaching and Gutenberg's printing press, 
Or our Franklin who dignified labor — though less — 

Four hundred years ago. 



15 



Who can say how we children would have fared, 
If our First Columbian had not more dared 

To do than others did. 
Can we suppose amon^ the men across the sea, 

Another could be found 

To believe the world was round. 
And been as brave and patient as he. 

Four hundred years a<^o? 

People talked, of a round world and lost Atlantis 
In ancient times, for a wise old priest of Sais 

Told Solon and Plato 
Learned from him and taui;ht his scholars and Jew 
And Arab and oriental astronomers knew. 
Until the "Dark A<;es" when learning was forgot. 
And men dared not say what they thought. 











But when again learning, 

like an angel of light, 
Spread her radiant wings 

over the world's dark night, 
This was one of the truths 

that first began to dawn, 
Great scholars and travelers 

with knowledge drawn 



16 



From much study artjucd so, like Mandeville, 

And those Venetians, and Tosconehi. But still. 

Thoui^di land far in the west, 

Brave seamen may have seen 'twas forgotten, 

and there was need, 
To prove such logic true, 

One to reason and dare too. 

And til purjiose unite wisdom with heroic deed, — 

Four hundred years ago. 

Well may doughty youngsters his example prize, 
The first of Columbian youth to rise 
Above his birth. The poor wool-comber's son 
Worked and studied and his title well won, 

Grand Adviiral of the Ocean. 
And now from every land grand men and women vie. 
To honor him for deeds that will not die; 
And with all that's fine and rare 

Hold in his name a great fail'. 
In Chicago, queen of the great lakes close by. 
Did that poor boy dream of honor so high. 

Four hundred years ago? 

Of his father, humbly toiling 'til his day's work was done, 
And his truly Roman mother teaching a blue-eyed son, 
As our own dear mothers now admonishing : 
"Always do right, then you need fear nothing," — 



" i,'i('I'i'|!'I'!|'||^'1i'.m; ■ 

J! ' l'l;l,'..!(:'„ 11 



•':Ml'ill'iifr,ir'li['ii!'''''' 



< 




We think with tcnderest love, 
And wish the}' could have seen the fair White City, 
That should some day be built across the sea, 
To honor the child that listened at their knee. 



19 



Yet grown up folks for<i;et they once were small and say 
"It's not a place for children to be in the way;" 
When we'd much like to celebrate in that great town, 
With all those fine people of renown, 

October twenty-iirst ; 
And help to praise Columbus in our way 

Of Eighteen- ninetv-two. 

For being so grand and true 
And wise to find our dear x^merica. 

Four hundred years ago. 

But all the schools of this great land 
Shall stand a truly patriotic l)and, 

And wave their starry flags: 
And in new rhyme and song be told: 

How one a brother kind, 

And son of dutiful mind, 
Became the greatest of sailors bold. 
With mind that tlicl reason as well as dare. 
And as a sage could argue with men of learning rare. 

Four hundred years ago. 

And that boys are little men we will play, 
Who can build three ships Columbia Day; 

And the girls, little ladies, 
Who in gowns of white, with such pretty air 
Their bottles dash on the bows and declare. 



20. 



Their names: — Columbus' own flag-ship, 

The Santa Maria. 

Then Pinta and Nina; 
Not sailed nor rigged in best equip, 

Four hundred years ago. 



i<'l,J|\lfl#fW 




But iirst from land to land one must beg, 
And by some trick stand up an egg 

For wise Salamanca men; — 
The states of Europe try from great to least, 
Persuade the king, persuade the priest, — 



21 



With help from kind brother Bartholomew 
And timely friend Pizon; — 
From perfidous king John, 

'Til good queen Isabella the story knew, 
Four hundred years ago. 



Favored by good Deza 
and Medina-Celli; 

Encouraged by Fernan- 
dez and Toscanelli; 

While unmindful ot 

banditti cohort. 

Rode friar [uan by 
night, to plead at 

court. 

Where Santangel 
helped with Quin- 

tanilla; 

And beautiful Beatriz, 

fair Beatriz of Moya 

Sat near and begged 

the queen. 

But who of us would 

be seen, 




22 



As those naughty children in tlie streets to scoff 
And call an old man "crazy explorer" and laugh, 
Four hundred years ago. 

One must be a queen to pawn her jewels or value high; 
While on the road to France a messenger must fly, 
And overtake Columbus at the old Pinos bridge, 
Tra\-ehng, discouraged, toward the mountain ridge. 




23 



CHAPTER II. 



And soon now a hundred and twenty men, 
Ninety sailors, a lad, three priests and gentlemen, 
Have bid a sad adieu. 




As off from Palos, August morning third. 
They leave dear "Sunny Spain" 
With dreadful doubts of land or gain. 
Well sped those men who sailed that day westward 
And won freedom for science and God's Word, 
Four hundred years ago. 

24 



When we reach the islands a while we cruise, 
But rough men our captain shall not abuse 
With threats of mutiny. 




We'll dodge sorry king John's fleet; and punish worse, 
The wicked owners who broke the Pinta with purpose; 
And the crew that sulked when far out from land; — 

And from the Canaries, 

Let us bring some birdies. 
For perhaps Columbus did — though so grand — 
For Diego and baby Ferdinand, 

Four hundred years ago. 



25 



Until the stoutest hearts with fear shall quail, 
Westward we will sail, and sail, and sail. 

For days, and days, and days; — 
And now to have some fun let us pretend 

To see great meteors fall. 

And dancing golilins tall, 



And birds that swooped whole 

ships with cNcry tar. 
From keel to deck and sail and 
topmost spar. 
Where sailors fancied the 

world did end, 




Get mistaken next in the Sargossa Sea, 

When little Nina fired and cried: "land for me!' 

At a mirage in the west. 
Then the sailors with courage ijuite aslack. 
Declared: "we're surely lost and will turn back." 



26 










Ifimid^'ik' 



^.^mh'vi 



...Mt.,.; ■'.'liii:; , 



mm 









''^iM'i)''S 



1 ^ 1 1 ' i»j 




?|i||!'> 



27 



The earnest man compelled now with cowards to temporize 
Submits all the veiled mysteries of the western skies; 
With his new ojreat problem of the world; for three days 
To win : — then prays God to show his penetrating gaze, 







The first faint gleam of hope, 
And soon saw a floating branch and 
a dear little bird; 
And then the seamen knew, 
That land they soon would view, 
And list to the sweetest bird-song 

ever heard, 
Four hundred years ago. 



Soon, a welcome fire-light glimmered, to gree 
Eager watchers from that lonely little fleet. 
Not one did sleep that long glad night. 
Now Hash! now bang ! now hark aright ! — 

'Twas Pinta's gun that roared. 
Land ! land ! wildly shout; land ' land ! land 

Boom ! bang ! boom ! bang ! bang ! 

How they shouted, how they sang. 
How they praised God at San Salvador land! 

Four hundred vears apo. 

o 



28 




29 



In the li,!4hl of that l)rijj;ht October morn, 
To thi-m it seemed a new world born, — 

And they all kissed the earth. 
Fn'st, in richest robes with banner unfurled, 
Straight to God a pra)'er sent like incense smoke uncurled. 

Then t<.) Ferdinand and Isaliella, 

Of Arraj:^on and Castilla, 
Columbus ^ave a ,<:(ilt of half the world: — 

Four hundred years a>4o. 



The men who once with terror uttered threats. 
Blushed now with shame and sharp re^^rets, 

For doubting a leader so wise; 
And be^'ged at Columbus' feet forgiveness; — 
While he forgave with more than manly goodness, 

As only noble souls will do. 



We'll think of his mother's, and Felipa's grave, 
And lonely Beatriz at home so brave, 

And some token for them bring: 



30 




31 



Though our books only tell, of land, and gold, 
And the Indian band 
From the new island-strand. 
Whom he brought on his winged sea-horses bold, 
"With eyes of lightning and voices of thunder," 
The ships that hlled the Indian with wonder, — 
Four hundred years ago? 




CHAPTER III 



m m »i 



Those who stood by might have seen then and now, 
The Admiral stroke his hand across a puzzled brow: 

What land was this he'd found? — 
Somewhere, in this sea seven bishops built seven cities, 
'Tis said, when they fled from the dark-skinned enimies, 
"" Of Roderic of Spain: 

32 




And their 
ever-l)loomin<^f 
and fruitful 
Antilles, 
Might they 
not lie. the 
garden of the 
Hesperides, 
\\'ho.se golden 
apples, an- 
■ient Tyre 
bought and 
sold; — 
And beyond Ophir, whence 

was broght the gold, 
For Solomon's beautiful 
temple ? 



And where was it St. Brendan 
for seven years regaled, 

When westward with fourteen brave monks he sailed. 
From Tralee in Kerry, to a beautiful land. 
And people wild, who learned from his pious band, 
The faith of God, and called him '• Ouetzacoatl. 
Rare and precious" — with crosses on his mantle: 

And before now a thousand years. 
Returned to tell the astonished people of Erin. 
Of his voyage and the strange land where he had been. 

a:3 



Or as the scalds have sung in some wild saga, 
Of Thor, and Odin, and the Vikings of Norway, 

And mixed with superstition, some truth, perhaps. 

Of the Vinland of bold Leif, 

son of Eric the Red. 
Where Tyker found sweet grapes; 

and K^aslsefne, who wed 
The noble Gudrid, may have built 

some mantled tower 
For his lonely lady and their 

darling baby Snorr, 
Half those thousand years ago. 




34 



And the storm-driven mariner hath told many a tale, 
Of the secrets that slip Old Chronos in a gale; 

From the fair Atlantis, 
Pytheas found and lost again: to years less antique. 
When Are Marson and the Champion of Brodovik, 
Found Irland-it-Mikla and the White Man's land: 
And the Zeno brothers still later their Es-to-ti-land: 
And wild Basques, stockfish on a bluffy strand. 
Of isles good and bad the sea had yet to reveal. 
Talked Cousin, and Dieppe, and Skolno and Costareal, 

And other seamen as bold. 



'f '"''^^ 







^A 



m^k 







Like that 
fabulous isle 
wrapped in 
perennial sun- 
shine. 

Where sleep- 
ing saints 
undisturbed in^ 
a cave recHne, ^^i-'^/fc' ;,*^'i'^[^^-*», 

With eyes V':^:-5^' vivM^j 
ever on the "jpS-'f^^^?^ 
sea; 



And nothing to employ but dreams of immortal youth. 
As time and the waves roll by, — though in truth. 




35 



Saints would better be doing for the kingdom they pray, 
Than lazily dreaming their time away, 
And their " Saints' Land of Promise," no fable of old. 
Should be of the western sea, — which Barintus told, 
Longer ago than all. 



But a story that more than all perplexes me, 
Ls that of some stra}' ranger of the Eastern Sea: 

How fiuwi Shan, of Cathay, 
Who aimlessly traveled with his Budhist band 
Till he reached around the sea a goodly land. 

Long centuries ago, they called Fusang. 

Forty thousand li east across that sea — 

so the story goes — 

The great Kahn then sent his 

ships. But who knows, 

For if truth, there should be such legend 

in Spain, 
Or Italy. Or. does there yet lie 

land in the main ? 

Then it may not be a fable, that beneath 

this sea of darkness, 

Sank long, long ago, the great and 

wonderful Atlantis, 

Like a drowning world, with awful 

quaking throes: 

While the memory of her ships 

and mighty heroes, 











i j(,i^ jT/j 



fe: 






Eden-like gardens and splendid cities, 
And ladies fair, are told as mythical stories 
Of the gods of younger nations. 



37 



But fable and fact alike we must pass by, 
With hope that future years, the truth maj' sift; and rely 
On later research, received as more authentic fame; 
For this new world, fair as a babe, must have a name. 
Since I find palm, and spice, and gum across this sea. 
And other explorers, east by land, found the same to be. 

In India and Cathay, — 
Though, I find not yet, the splendors of which I 've read, — 
The ancient poets and philosophers have said. 
That this earth, like the stars, shall some day prove round, 
And the east, and the west, together shall be bound: 
Linked with grand thought like this, Marco Polo's Indies 
Of the East, seem Indies of the West, and thus agrees. 

That latest name is best. 




38 



CHAPTER IV 

# # 

When again Columbus returned to Spain 

The people praised and praised until he forgot the pain 

Of eighteen years of scorn. 
But not faithful friends nor what they had done, 

Nor loved ones, nor convent 

Where once he 'd begged, sad spent, 
Food and drink for his fainting son. 

Four hundred years ago. 







No care-worn clouds darken his noble brow, 
While every one calls him a great man now — 
Greater than the great duke, Medinacelli; — 
Greater, some thought, than scholars like Toscanelli, 
Or friends at court, or Palos, or Rabida. 
Greater, surely, than scoffers at Salamanca. 

39 



■\ _ i; , v™f9i*SPM^ 




Into his eye steals 

sadness only, 
When he thinks of 

good Felipa, who died, 
And his two little child- 
ren at her side, 
it may be, too, he 

wished his parents 

could have known 
How rich the fruit of 
seed their toiling 

hands had sown. 



Where cnce at Isabella's feet he humbly sued 
Her royal favor, he kneels in gratitude, 

To kiss her sovereign hand. 
Then sails again with gladder heart, 

and ships of gayer sheen 
To build a town in the name of his honored queen. 

They made him a duke and a viceroy, everything 

So great, he was all but a king. 

The great and small for his favor plied. 

Until good Queen Isabella died. 

Then evil hearts so long 
Grown jealous, sought some stain to fling. 

That should bring blame and shame. 

And rob his splendid name. 
And poisoned the brain of the Spanish king. 

Four hundred years ago. 



40 






^'-^C-^.-ST^, 



And though the lands and the 

glory he won was Spain's, 
The king's envoy sent him to 

prison in chains. 
And broke so great a heart; — 
Till good people who saw 

cried: " What a wrong!" 

And conscience pricked the king, 
For doing so mean a thmg, 
Until he opened the doors of the prison again; 
Though not his royal heart to the saddened man 
Whose heart could never-more grow strong, 
Four hundred years ago. 







Ah, let us now play no funny antic, 

For when last he sailed the stormy Atlantic, 

His saddest troubles o'ertook him. 
Traitor, and storm, and shipwreck, and famine's gnaw. 
Drove deepest their shafts of pain when he saw 
Young Ferdinand at Sir Christopher's Cove, 
So bravely bearing his trials for love. 

Of his dear, scorned old father. 

Though foes unite to thwart his noblest plan. 
And sad in heart, the gray-haired old man 
Still triumphs, and bestows on his ungrateful king, 
The last best lands he found. With such offering, 



41 



To rewin the royal favor, and promises made, 
Vainly hoped; till his life-boat anchor weighed 
OfT coast a better world. 









So poor now again, and old, 

at Valladolid, 
When the death angel came 
To call the great man's name, 
And showed him in heaven how 

great was his deed. 
Ah, should Amerigo have won 



his rightful mead, 



So long ere the bloom of his patient seed 
Four hundred years ago? 



A few true friends the mighty soul regret. 
As fell the sleep, that selfish hearts no more can fret, 
On those keen blue eyes so often dimmed by tears, 
In the troubled life of seventy years. 

"All that I could I have done. 

To God. who hath ever helped in worst need, I now must 
Leave all," he said, with the Christian's holy trust; 

And on his failing breath. 

Sinking fast into death. 
Floated, like a truce o'er the sea, 

these words of sacred writ: 
" Into thy hands, O Lord, my spirit I commit." 



43 



And from a clay of noblest mold the soul had flit, — 
Four hundred years ago? 




And he who was Viceroy of the Indies, 
And Grand Admiral of the Ocean Seas, 
Duke of Veragua, Marquis of Jamaica, 
And the great Discoverer of America; 
Yet to be the inspiration 
Of every Columbian son; 
Was laid to rest in an unnoticed grave, 
The friendly fathers of San Francisco gave, 
Neath old Castillian skies. 



43 



We hear of few who were so nobly born. 
That could o'erlook the foil 
Of years of patient toil. 

And in distress express no vengeful scorn, 
Four hundred years ago. 







CHAPTER V. 



But when the angels bore his spirit to the skies, 
Did they explain some vision of his dying eyes, 
Of the happy millions who should bless, 
His land redeemed from wilderness, 

To be a home of the free, 
Where great and small may plead the right, 
And work out their plans by truth's purer light? 



44 



Life lit with new hopes, 

in a happy dream, 
To the New world flowed. 




steady as the ocean 

stream 



And bore on its tide some health, some wealth to find, 
And some who of bigotry had bitterly pined. 

And some for better homes; 
And some, who had sinned, by shame oppressed. 

Sought their lives to renew. 

With the sweet breath they drew, 
From'^the fresh, untainted land of the West, 

Four hundred years ago. 

Others, with impulse like his own earnest heart. 
Came, urged by loving desire to impart 
Some hope of Jesus' love; 



45 



Or about the world some new grand thought 
Like he, Copernicus, and Gahleo taught, 

And burning with noble zeal 

The new truth to reveal; — 
Yet oft, by king on throne and priest in hood, 
Prevented in those dark days from doing that good. 

Four hundred years ago. 



Unscared by spectral fancies 

that o'er waves play and leap, 

O'er the ocean no more a trackless deep, 

Far and wide the freighted vessels sweep, 

From continent to continent. 
To West no more the mariner casts an empty look, 

For teaming cities rise 

To greet his anxious eyes, 
With way plain as our toy- boat on the brook. 
Frets not as he o'er a perplexing log-book. 

Four hundred years ago. 




46 



CHAPTER VI. 
















King Ferdinand, later repenting neglect so ill, 
Sent men to bring his ashes to beautiful Seville. 

And build a monument. 
And Santa Maria de la Antigua, 
Gave up the noblest dead that in her transepts lay. 
Were La Cuevas aves and pater nosters farther heard; 
Or could Carthissian friars' lifeless dust safer guard; 
Or were the banks of Gaudalquiver, 

Fairer than Douro's side, 

To satisfy the noble pride. 

Of those who shed the affectionate tear, 

Or owned with kindred love the dust upon that bier, 

Four hundred years ago.'' 
47 










But his ashes, like his questful spirit, 
'Neath Andulusian skies albeit. 

Were not forever to rest. 
A new king, with honor greater than we can tell. 
Sent them across the sea, he once had dared so well, 

To sleep at San Domingo, 

Where the soft sea winds blow. 
And the waves had born his craft on their restless swel 

Four hundred years ago. 



48 



Born with that spirit he brous^ht to the West, 
The people, grateful now, will not let him rest, 

Till his guerdon, like his (juest, is won. 
WHien two centuries and a halt had rolled, 

With the tides of ebb and flow; 

\\'ith greater pomp and show. 
Than would ha\"e plea'-ed his foes of old. 
He was brought to proud Havana, to he 
Beneath a new cathedral, quaint and high, 

Now called gray and old; 
Where the sea moans and surges below, 

Now sweep the winds wild above it; 

Now sigh like a sad, gentle spirit. 
He saw the same star-light and sun-glow. 

Four hunch'ed years ago. 

His guerdon we children will some time win, 
Which to him so long denied has been, 

And build our monument 
Greater than buili that fickle king of the Cid. 

We 'fl write Columbia, 

Cross false America, 
And unmake the mistake St. Die's careless schoolmen did 

Four hundred years ago. 

We'll build our country up with honest character, 
And noble minds, nor let the soulless transactor. 
Hide behind some cunning law, a wily scheme. 



49 




To rob and crush our fellow- 
men; and \vi h witty theme 
Dazzle men to see \vron<^ 

as rij^ht. 
Then grateful hearts as living 

stones on duty bent, 
Shall be the memorial, 
And our signs armorial, 
To the'hrst heroe of 

our continent. 



b'our hundred y 



ears aeo. 



The names of Felipa and Beatriz, 

Those good wives, let us write close to his, 

And near his honored queen, 
Her maid of honor, Beatriz of Moya; 
And plainest, the sainted mother, Susana, 

Though long she'd slept in death; 
And through ages, dark or bright, of our country, 

Let this fair, faithful band 

Of earnest women stand. 
Honored on the pages of its history. 

Four hundred years ago. 



As he did, we '11 pass his foes without a fret, 
And not one friend ungratefully forget; 
Thank Genoa for parents who taught the piety. 
And honest toil that shaped life's future dignity; 

50 



And for her brave sons, from whom he learned so early 

To dare the ocean wave. 

For those true men, who could 

reason though bigots did rage. 




Thank Spain, and the wise, brave queen, 
Who raised her grandest Palladin, 

P^-om his humble station to adorn the world's heroic page, 

As the forerunner of liberty's brightest age, 
Four hundred years ago. 

Of that imputed stain, when for glittering gold, 
They say his fellow-men, he bound and cruelly sold. 
We'll rid his honored name. 

51 




Gold! drlusivf n'old! men cried 
for gold till cherished pursuit; 
I le must 3'ield and bring on 

him this vile repute. 
When tarth refused to reveal 

the idol dust, 
They sold her children to 

satisfy that lust. 

What would Columbus do? There 's none so great, 
That must not sometimes yield to unlucky fate: 

Above the king compelled; 

Below the underling rebelled; 
And hoping to appease their common greed. 
Perchance, united will forced some imlmly deed. 

Four hundred years ago. 

If true, sins he had that must be confessed; 
We hope that had he done as pleased him best. 
They never would have been, so we let them rest. 

For we are sorry for him. 
When those who write about our here:) brave, 
Would make us think he sometimes was a cruel knave. 

We wish they would explain, 

How prone to cause others pain, 
They find those who, as nobly bear the filial part; 
And kept for foes as patient, forgiving heart, 

Four hundred vears ago. 



sa 



And Genoa's humble child wv honor now, 
And love to trace upon that patient brow, 

The truth it bore within. 
With sublime patience his divine call obeying, 

Against oppression's laws, 

Worked out his noble cause, 
And taught the world, oft disheartened, little murmuring, , 

To live to an eternal purpose "Be a Blessing." 

Four hundred years ago. 



X 






'^''^^^^^m-^^-^'^'^'^ 




^ IS 



.58 



EXPLANATORY NOTES. 



Christopher Columhus — Was born at 27 Vicco Ponticello 
street, Genoa, Italy, 1436; died at Valladolid, Spain, May 20, 1506; 
buried first, in the Franciscan Convent of Santa Maria de la Anti- 
gua at Val. ; removed to La Cuevas, in Seville, 1513; to San Do- 
mingo, 1536; and supposed to have been removed to Havana, 1795. 
On his first and second voyages to America he discovered the West 
Indies; third, the continent of South America at mouth of Orinoco; 
fourth, North America at Honduras. 

Ferdinand Magellan — A Portuguese navigator, who set out 
with three ships and 234 men to circumnavigate the world; he 
reached the Philiipine Islands, where he was killed by the natives; 
two of his ships were wrecked, but one, with only fifteen men, 
finally accomplished the first voyage around the world, 1519-1522. 

Josephus, Flavius— An eminent Jewish historian and patriot, 
born at Jerusalem A. D. 37; died, 100. 

Isabella — Queen of Castile, Spain. 

Ferdinand — King of Arragon, Spain. 

Old World — Eastern continent. 

Roses of Asia — Are grown in fields; Asia is the home of the 
rose; perfumes are there made from them. 

Lilies of the Nile — Are renowned; perfumes are extracted 
from them. 

Yule-log — A large piece of log burned in the fire-place at 
Christmas-tide in England: Holly is an evergreen shrub with 
bright red berries; Mistletoe, a parasitic plant growing on the oak. 

Danube — A river of Ciermany; the forget-me-not grows wild 
and in great abundance on its banks; it here received its name. 

Coral Islands — Were not much known until seamen had 
learned to venture out on the ocean. 

Mikado — Sovereign of Japan; Shah of Persia; Sultan of Turkey; 
Czar of Russia; Kaiser of Germany; Rajah, a Prince of India. 

Conform — When people adhere to established creeds they are 
said to conform; when they embrace new ideas they usually do not 

54 



conform; about 400 years ago a Ljreat Reformation spread over 
Europe. 

Luther, Martin — Was a great preacher of Germany; born at 
Eisleben November 10, 1483; died at Eisleben February 18, 1546. 

Gutenberg, Johann — Born at Mainz, Germany, 1400; died at 
Mainz February 24, 1478; invented printing press, 1450. 

Franklin, Benjamin — Born January 17, 1706, at Boston, Mass.; 
died April 17, 1770; first discoverer of the principles utihzing elec- 
tricity; he was a very practical man. of simple habits, and empha- 
sized the dignity of labor. 

Atlantis — Said by the ancients to be a large island of the At- 
lantic Ocean, destroyed by the earthquake. 

Sais — An ancient city of Egypt at mouth of the Nile. 

Solon — B. C. 594; an ancient Greek patriot, philosopher and 
law-giver. 

Plato — B. C. 420; a Greek philosopher and patriot. 

Dark Ages, (.)R Middle At.es — The period between the fall of 
the Roman Empire and the revival of learning. 

Venetian Travelers — Morco Polo and his two brothers returned 
to their native city, \'enice, 1595. after more than twenty years of 
travel; Nicolo Conti. another celebrated Venetian traveler of later 
date. 

T(.)aCANELi.i, Paulo — Aphvsician of Florence, who believed and 
argued the rotundity of the earth in Columbus' time. 

Mandeville, Sir John — An English scholar, who returned 
to England after many years of travel, in 1322. 

WooL-coiMBER — Columbus' father, Domenico Columbus; his 
mother was Susana Fontanarossa. 

Roman Mother — Columbus' family were of old Roman descent; 
Columbus had blue eyes and yellow or reddish hair when a boy. 

White Crrv — The Columbian Exposition buildings of 1892. 
CoLUMHiA Day — October 21; America was discovered October 
I 2, O. S., but when the calendar was corrected it brought the da}* 21. 

Their Names — Tiie three ships of Columbus were named Santa 
Maria, Capt. Pero Alonso Nino; Pinta, Martin Alonso Pinzon; 
Nina, Vincente Yanez Pinzon; they were not very good ships, 
nor in best equipment. 

Salamanca — Was the seat of a University of Spain; the King 
and Queen referred Columbus to the doctors there; they ridiculed 
the idea of the sphericity of the earth, and asked bim to stand up 
an egg. 

Bartholomew — Columbus had three brothers, Giovanni, Bar- 
tholomew, Giocomi or Diego, and a sister Bianchinetta. 

55 



PiNzoN Martin Alonzo — of Palos. helped Columbus in securing 
boats and men for his first voyage, and lent him money also; he 
afterward was not so friendly. 

King John — Of Portugal, sent Columbus to explain his theory 
before his wise men, w'ho declared he must be crazy; the King sent 
Columbus off, then he sent ships to find the country he had talked 
of; but the men were afraid to go very far, and returned to ridicule 
Columbus. 

M EI N-f^ -Cei.li — Was a powerful Duke of Southern Spain and 
friend of Columbus. 

Juan Perez de la Marchea — Prior of the Monastery of La 
Rabida and friend of Columbus. 

Deza, Diego de — Friend and patron of Columbus at the court; 
tutor of the royal children. 

Banditti — The country was infested with robbers through 
which Father Juan rode by night to reach the court and plead for 
Columbus. 

Santangel, Luis de — Treasurer of Arragon. 

QuiNTANiLLA, Alonzo DE — Treasurer of Castile. 

Beatriz of Moya — Maid of honor to Isabella. 

Crazy Expi.orer — Columbus was often ridiculed in the streets, 
even by children. 

Jewels — It is said Isabella offered to pawn her jewels to raise 
the money to furnish the expense of the voyage; Spain had carried 
on a long war and the treasury was nearly exhausted. 

Road to France — Not the direct road from Northern Spain, 
liut from Granada to Cordova; he had received a last refusal from 
the King and Queen, and he was on his way to see his children 
first at Cordova, and then going to France. 

PiNOS Bridge, or Bridge of Pines — The Queen's messenger 
overtook Columbus just across this bridge, six miles out of Granada. 

Palos — A seaport of Southwestern Spain, where the fleet set 
sail on the first voyage, August 3, old style, or August 14, modern 
time. 

Canaries — Columbus did not set out directly west, but cruised 
among the islands; Canaries, or Dog Islands, is the home of the 
canary bird. 

Broke, Pinta — The rudder of the Pinta was broken, and it was 
suspected that the owners, who sailed with them, did it with a pur- 
pose to have an excuse to return. 

Diego and Ferdinand— Columbus' sons. 

Meteor's Fall — .A meteor fell into the sea ahead of the ships 
and it frightened the sailors; goblins are imaginary beings of all 

56 



kinds which superstitious people believe in; we hope every child 
knows better than to believe such things now. 

World End — People used to suppose the world had an end, 
just as a field has. 

S.4RG0SS.\ Sea — Places in the sea where seaweed grows; floating 
grass is also accumulated by the ocean currents; in the distance it 
appears like land. 

MiR.AGE — An illusion in the air; Columbus' men thought they 
saw a large, beautiful city. 

Three Days — The crew became at last so mutinous that Co- 
lumbus was obliged to make a condition with them that if they did 
not find land in three days he would return. 

Pinta's Gun — It is said that Rodrigo de Triana, a sailor on the 
Pinta, first shouted "Land!" and the Pinta fired the first salute. 
San Salvador (or Holy Savior) — Where Columbus first landed; 
the natives called it Guanahani, or Cat Island. 

Felipa Moniz de Palestrello — First wife of Columbus; she and 
the two youngest children died at Funchal; she was the mother of 
Diego. 

Beatriz Enriquez — Second wife of Columbus; was the mother 
of Ferdinand. 

Winged Sea-horses — The Indians supposed the ships to be 
sea monsters, with eyes of lightning and voices of thunder. 

Seven Bishops — Are said to have fled from the Moors when 
they overcame King Roderic, in the seventh century: they sailed 
in a boat westward until they reached lovely islands, where they 
built seven cities: are supposed to be the Antilles. 

Hesperides, or Daughters of the Sea — Are supposed, also, 
to be the Antilles; the ancients told many fanciful stories about 
them. 

Golden Apples — Oranges and lemons. 

Tyre — An old city of Asia on the Mediterranean Sea; her men 
were great seamen, and some suppose they must have reached 
America in the long voyages of three years with King Solomon's 
men, spoken of in the Bible. 

Ophir — Some think may have been Mexico, Central America or 
Peru. 

St. Branden — Was an Irish monk, who set out with fourteen 
monks to find a legendary "Isle of the Blessed" of which he had 
read; they came to a beautiful land answering to the description of 
the West Indies or Mexico, where he lived seven 3-ears and then 
returned, in the fifth century; the Irish monks used to have crosses 
worked on their mantles. 

57 



QuETZACOATL — Was a Mexican hero or divinitj', so long ago 
people cannot make out just what his people did think of him: some 
think he was St. Branden, others St. Thomas, of the Bible. 

Erin — A name for Ireland. 

Skalds — Old Norwegian poets and minstrels. 

Saga— A song of the skalds. 

Thor and Odin — -Were old Norwegian deities. 

Vikings — Brave sea captains, a sort of noble. 
ViNLAND — -Supposed to be New England: named so by the 
Norsemen. 

Eric the Red — An old \'iking: he named Greenland. 

Mantled Tower — There is an old tower at Newport, R. I. sup- 
posed to have been built by Norsemen. 

Lkif Ericson — Was the son of Eric the Ked; he is said to have 
discovered America in the year looo. 

Tvrker — A German sailor who came with Leif Ericson; he 
found the grapes, after which Vinland was named. 

Karlsefne, Thorwald — A Viking who came from Greenland to 
Vinland, and did much for the new colony. 

GuDRiD — Was the widow of Thorstein Ericson: she married 
Karlsefne and came to \'inland, where their son Snorr was born; 
she was a kind, intelligent and spirited woman. 

Snorr — Was the son of Karlsefne and Gudrid, and was the first 
Norse child born in \'inland: it is said that he is one of the ances- 
tors of the sculptor, Thorwaldsen. 

"Old Chronos" — A very old name of the Atlantic Ocean. 

Pvtheas — An ancient mariner, who thought he found Atlantis, 
but lost it again. 

Are Marson — A Norse or Irish sailor. 

Champion of Brodovik — An Irish sailor. 

Irland it Miki.a, or Great Ireland — Supposed to be the 
Carolinas. 

White Man's Land, or Huitramani.a — Supposed to be Geor- 
gia and Florida. 

Zend, Nicolo — And his brother, Venetian gentlemen, of wealth, 
who sailed on the Atlantic and were driven in a storm to a strange 
land called Es-to-ti-land. 

Basques — A brave people of Northern Spain: they were brave 
seamen, and some of them claim to have reached a blufty countrj- 
where stockfish, or codfish, abound, which thev called Sto.xhxia; 
supposed to be Newfoundland. 

Cousis, Dieppe, Skolno and Costareal — Were brave seaman 
who sailed the Atlantic, and are said to have been, at different 

58 



times, driven on to strange land; Skolno was a Pole, in the service 
of the Danes, sent out as an explorer. 

Barintus — Was an old monk; it is supposed his story was only 
a myth. 

E.ASTER Sea — Pacific Ocean, east of Cathay. 

Cathay — China. 

Hwui Shan — A Buddhist monk, with five other monks, sup- 
posed to have wandered to America in the fifth centur\'; Buddhist 
monks travel aimlessly, without an objective point; Hwui Shan is 
said to have come by way of the Aleutian Islands. 

Fusang — Supposed to be Mexico. 

Li — A Chinese mile. 

Sea of Darkness — The Atlantic Ocean; it is said after Atlantis 
was destroyed it became so turbid and muddy that it was impossi- 
ble to navigate it. 

Quaking Throes — It is said Atlantis was destroyed by terrible 
earthquakes; some think that it was the same as the deluge in the 
Bible. 

Eden-like Gardens — Some think the Garden of Eden may have 
been located on Atlantis. 

Gods of Younger Nations — Some think the deities of the East- 
ern nations were only the Kings and Queens of Atlantis; 3'ounger 
nations, as they grew, heard of their exploits and called them gods. 

Marco Polo's Indies of the East — Columbus thought he had 
reached the East Indies bj- sailing west, so he called the land West 
Indies. 

Eighteen Years — It is said Columbus was eighteen years pro- 
curing aid and the permission to develop his plans of a western 
voyage; during this time he suffered much scorn and ridicule. 

Built a Town — On his second voyage Columbus founded the 
town of Isabella, on St. Domingo. 

King's Envoy — On his third voyage Bobadilla was sent to look 
after the affairs of Columbus, and brought him back in chains. 

Last he Sailed — Columbus made four voyages to America: 
First, from Palos, August 3d, 1492; second, from Cadiz, Septem- 
ber 25, 1493; third, from San Lucar, May 30, 1498; on this voyage 
he discovered South America, at the mouth of the Orinoco; fourth, 
from Cadiz, May 11, 1502; on this voyage the Governor of St. Do- 
mingo refused even in an approaching storm; shelter to his boats 
in the harbor of the very town Columbus had built, although his 
boats were badly damaged, he continued his explorations, and dis- 
covered North America at Honduras. Later he was totally ship- 
wrecked. 

59 



Sir Christopher's Cove, Jamaica — where Colunibiis was ship- 
wrecked on his last voyage;'the crew endured extreme hardships; 
after long delay the Governor of St. Domingo consented to help 
them back to^pain. 

Young Ferdinand — Columbus son, about twelve years of age, 
accompanied his father on his last voyage. 

Vali.adolid — A town on the Douro, in Old Castile, Spain; Co- 
lumbus died here and was buried in the Franciscan Convent of 
Santa Maria de la Antigua. 

Amerigo Vespucio — A Florentine merchant who sailed to Amer- 
ica, and wrote such a glowing description of the country that the 
scholars of St. Die began calling it after his name; some say he was 
a friend of Columbus, and had no intention that he should be 
robbed of this honor. 

Old Castillian — Old Castile, a province of Spain. 

To Impart — It is said one of Columbus' great objects was to 
establish the Christian religion in the country he should find. 

New World — Western continent. 

Copernicus — A great German philosopher who lived from 1473 
to 1543; he taught that the earth was only like some stars, and be- 
longed to a system of planets moving around the sun, but he dared 
not teach it right out, for it was called heresy. 

Galileo — An Italian philosopher, 1564-1642, who invented the 
telescope, microscope, thermometer and clock: he taught that the 
world moved, and was made to take it back, but he stamped his 
foot on the floor and said, "It does move, nevertheless." 

LoG-BooK — A record of the ship's course; Cohunl>us did not 
have as perfect ways of determining the ship's course as seamen 
now have, and it perplexed him a good deal out on the high sea 

Seville — A beautiful city of Southern Spain, in And.ilusia, on 
the Guadalquivir. 

La Cuevas — A Carthusian monastery of Seville, to which the 
remains of Columbus were removed from Santa Maria de la Antigua. 

Ave and Pater-noster — Are formal prayers of the Roman Cath- 
olic Church. 

Guadalquivir — A river of Andalusia, in Southern Spain. 

DouRO — A river of Castile, Spain. 

Andalusia — A province of Southern Spain. 

San Domingo — A city of St. Domingo, West Indies. 

Havana — A city of Cuba, West Indies. 

King of the Cid — The ancient Spaniards were called Cids. 

St. Die — A small town in the domain of Duke Rene, in the 
Varges Mountains, France; Duke Rene was fond of educated peo- 

60 



pie; he befriended and gave a home to a great scholar by the name 
of Walter Lud, who drew about him other scholars; Walter Lud, 
with the help of Duke Rene, established here a flourishing school. 
Amerigo wrote a letter, with the interesting account of the New 
World to his friend Giocondo, then in Paris; here Giocondo 
met Mathias Ringmann, and told him about Amerigo's letter; 
Ringniann became a teacher in the St. Die school; here he met 
Walter A\'aldseemuller, a geographer and map-maker, and he 
wrote up a book and drew a map, calling the New World Amer- 
ica. It seems careless of those scholars to make such a mistake, 
but I suppose it was with them as it is with a great many people 
now in the country' and small towns, who love learning, but do not 
always have the privilege of informing themselves correctly. 

Genoa — A city of Italy, where Columbus was born and reared; 
it was called Genoa the Superb; manj' of her citizens were brave 
seamen, and among them Columbus acquired his first knowledge 
of the sea. 

Palladin — A knight or great man of Spain. 

Imputed Stain — It is said Columbus sold the Indians for slaves; 
it was very wrong if he did: we think his enemies have slandered 
him a great deal. 

Cherished Pursuit — It is said the men Columbus had with him 
were so anxious to find gold that he was obliged often to turn from 
his exploring, and search for gold; the King and people at home in 
Spain expected gold, for Columbus supposed he had found Cathay 
and India, where other travelers said it abounded. When they 
could not find gold — that is, not enough to satisfy them — they 
thought to increase their profits by selling the Indians for slaves. 
We do not believe Columbus wished it as much as some writers 
say, but, as rulers now-a-days must let something go on that can 
not very well be helped, when many people wish it. We have read 
that he did not allow the slaves to be treated unkindly when he was 
able to prevent it. We are sorry that such wicked things ever 
could have happened about our country, or the man to whose pa- 
tience and bravery we are indebted so much for our happy homes 
and country. 

Be a Blessing — In the twelfth chapter of Genesis we read that 
God told Abraham to go and find a country which he should show 
him, and said, "And thou shall be a blessing." (Second verse.) 
I suppose he meant by that, Abraham should live to a good, high 
purpose and the world would be better for his having lived, and 
that mankind should receive a blessing from his life. The Bible 
tells us Abraham was a very patient man, and Josephus says he 

61 



was a great scholar; the Apostle Paul says Abraham "went out, 
not knowing whither he went." Columbus reminds us of him in 
patience and bravery; he, too, felt that God wished him to find an- 
other country, and he set off, not knowing where he was going or 
how to go; one went by land, the other by sea. We think God 
must have had something to do with it, or what he did would never 
have turned out such a blessing to the world. Some say he made 
too large demands from the rulers of tlie country from which he 
served and too much expected his own glory. He might have in- 
tended, by reserving so much power to himself, to be able in time 
to do something wise and good. We know things hardly ever turn 
out for us as we plan them. It was right Columbus should receive 
some reward for his labor and patience. We hardly believe a 
really wicked man would have been so patient and brave in follow- 
ing what he believed to be his divine calling, or so patient and for- 
giving with his enemies. We hope that some day yet there will be 
found somewhere stowed away proofs to clear him of the wrong he 
is accused of. His work has surely been a blessing to mankind. 




N-'' 



H ^^ ' 7R 






,0 



\- 



► ' • o- ' 









•n^n^ 












► ,«. s • 







•^^ 










,0 rTj - 'CcSy/l^i* 






1 -. 



^'':?^V _^o' 






"^^ 












^^'-^^ 



^ . » • 



'-^0^ 

.^°' 













O 






A 












-i 









^^ *i«fc ^.^ /^ 




>:i ■ 



•1 ' 









-^^0^ 









^^ 



•1 o^ 





%^' 



^^'\ 



•\/ /^^e^"; %^ =:j!fe'v \/ ::^^€^ \,^ ^;f^ 




.^^-"^ 






,v 






■■^^-i^' 






:^'^¥^': 



,^^'' 



v^ 



t^ .rv 



A' 



<. 






.<^ 






vT 


S^ 


• ''^' 


V'^V 




Jl-g 


. • .A 














"o 


>"■ 






J" 


■^^ 








^_^ 


4r 






<J>-^ 








•~, ^^ 








\\ 


u 


K^^ 




■*' 


V 


'V^ 






..^^ 


J^ 


-> -^ * r. i 


l-^' •> 


•> 



.0^ 















---^^' 



■=1 ^r- 



, ~-' .v*^* ^--^ 

'^}^^\>^^ ^% ^3>#p\^ ^\. ^^w^ -^""^ 












.^^ o .„„„' 0-' V 



<^^ 

*i^. 



^°-^<^, 









V. "^ c^ .^^^^.^; 







■u 









A,V 










'^ 






-.0- >-^^', «. 



,*"■ 



<"^ 



^ /^^^%^^ ^,. a'^ /^- 



v^Oi^ 









^ 









L' .^^ 



.N^^^-^. 



